Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Hubitat swoops in to save Lowe’s Iris smart home devices from extinction

Add as a preferred source on Google

Smart home devices apparently don’t have the lasting attraction of hammers and nails. On Sunday, March 31, Lowe’s announced that its Iris-branded smart home devices were becoming defunct and the company pulled the plug on the platform. But one clever manufacturer seems to have saved the day. Hubitat announced that it would continue to support the devices, which include contact sensors, motion sensors, plug-in outlet, key fobs, and other connective gizmos through its recently released Hubitat Elevation home automation hub.

Late adopters were able to connect their Iris devices if they were using second or third-generation Iris devices but Lowe’s first-gen device users were going to be out of luck. That is, until Hubitat started tinkering with the devices and the back end of the Hubitat Elevation software. In a release, the company says that after just two weeks, it had developed a working prototype and even showed a proof of concept in a YouTube video.

Recommended Videos

It was a bold move and one that should attract the hundreds of inquiries Hubitat has received from Iris users with first-generation devices. The engineering team at the company has already integrated the home automation platform and included the fix in a new software release last week.

“We are doing the impossible, supporting Iris Version 1 Zigbee sensors on a platform that doesn’t require the cloud or an internet connection to work,” Patrick Stuart, vice president of Product and Business Development said in a statement. “We have an experienced yet scrappy team that just doesn’t take no for an answer.”

Hubitat released the next generation of the Hubitat Elevation home automation hub the first week of February, so it’s a fairly new device in the smart home market. Part of the hub’s attraction is in its wide range of compatibility with Zigbee and Z-Wave radio-enabled devices. The device is also compatible with digital assistants including Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant, as well as standard smart home protocols including Zigbee, Z-Wave, Lutron, LAN, and cloud-connected smart home devices. While Hubitat isn’t the best-known smart home platform out there, the company recently launched a national advertising campaign to explain to potential customers how the Hubitat Elevation works.

As a mea culpa from Lowe’s, first-gen Iris device owners were offered prepaid Visas for their sensors. Those who hung onto them can now use their apology cash to buy Hubitat Elevation. The company has even offered a carrot for their newly acquired Iris customers, putting the $150 device on their website for a cool $100, with free shipping included.

Clayton Moore
Contributor
Clayton Moore’s interest in technology is deeply rooted in the work of writers like Warren Ellis, Cory Doctorow and Neal…
Amazon wants to design in-house chips for Kindles, Fire TV, and Echo speakers
Apple did it first. Amazon is doing it now, starting with 40 million chips a year and a partner most people have never heard of.
Amazon Kindle Scribe dark mode featured image.

Apple's decision to design its own chips reshaped the consumer electronics industry. Amazon may be about to make the same call, just about two decades later.

Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reports that Amazon is preparing to shift away from externally sourced processors for its consumer electronics lineup, marking what he describes as the company's first major processor procurement change in 20 years. The transition is expected to begin in 2027.

Read more
Beatbot’s AI pool cleaners aim to keep your Summer celebration going during peak season with deep discounts
Beatbot's Summer Pool Carnival offers deep discounts on a widely-acclaimed line-up of pool cleaners. Go, grab one this July!
beatbot discounts

As the World Cup heats up and Independence Day backyard gatherings loom, pool owners face a familiar summer paradox. The busier the social calendar gets, the harder it becomes to keep a pool in top shape. Enter Beatbot, the intelligent pool care brand positioning itself as the invisible infrastructure behind uninterrupted summer fun. In our reviews, offerings like the Beatbot Sora 70 and AquaSense 2 Ultra hammered that appeal with a mix of solid performance and a thoughtful feature set. If that sounds appealing, Beatbot's Summer Pool Carnival is offering deep discounts of up to 44%, starting July 1st.

The flagship offering is the AquaSense 2 Ultra, positioned as the world's first AI-powered 5-in-1 robotic pool cleaner. It combines floor, wall, waterline, and surface cleaning with integrated water clarification. The whole kit is held in place by Beatbot's HybridSense AI Vision System and CleverNav AI Path Planning. The system handles intelligent obstacle avoidance, adaptive route optimization, and even night cleaning, allowing homeowners to skip manual maintenance entirely.

Read more
SwitchBot’s new outdoor security camera uses AI to describe activity around your home
This 3K outdoor camera can explain what happened and search footage by prompt
Person, Security, Appliance

SwitchBot has launched the Outdoor Pan/Tilt Cam 3K in North America and the UK, adding a new outdoor security camera for monitoring yards, driveways, entrances, garages, and small shops.

The camera is designed to cover a wider area than a fixed security camera. It can rotate horizontally and vertically, follow moving subjects, record in 3K resolution, and use AI to summarize what happened in a clip, such as a delivery arriving, an animal entering the yard, or someone approaching the house.

Read more